by Shelly Jones
We don our masks each morning, step out into crisp
sunshine, head up the hill, backs hunched, legs
propelling us back in time to a safer version of ourselves.
We walk, ghost-like, on the empty campus: sheet-less
mattresses, broken screens, a collage of sticky notes
in a window spelling out “hi!” - a greeting from a lost
species picked up by u-haul trucks, parents’ SUVs.
We press on up the hill, breath no longer jagged, flagging,
our lungs acclimated to the climb made so often - two,
three times a day. There is nothing else to do, we think,
but that is not why we come. A shadow passes over us,
darkening our faces. We look up, stop, point at the grey-blue
bird - its wingspan prehistoric, its neck u-shaped, reminding
us to turn around, look down the hill, at all we’ve climbed.
We wait till we can no longer see the heron, start down the hill,
passing the pond, its nest tucked in the reeds at the far side.
We walk home, knowing we will head out again tomorrow.